The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
The Cigar collection is Remy Latour's study in contrast, the ritual of the cigar itself, the way it moves between moments of ceremony and intimacy. Cigar Black Oud, launched in 2014, takes that concept further into darkness. Oud brings depth and a certain rawness, the kind of material that doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is. Vanilla and tonka bean soften the edges. Amber and musk bring warmth. It's the fragrance of someone who orders a drink and means to finish it.
The note structure here is built for longevity over projection. The citrus top doesn't try to announce itself across the room, it's there for the wearer, the first few minutes of brightness before the composition deepens. The heart of Ceylonese cinnamon and Peru balsam is where the warmth lives, the part that reads as cozy rather than aggressive. And the base, vanilla, tonka bean, benzoin, amber, creates a sweet, powdery foundation that can last through an entire workday and into the evening without reapplying.
The evolution
The opening hits bright and tart, Florida tangerine, Sicilian lemon, a quick flash of citrus that clears within twenty minutes. Then the heart takes over: Ceylonese cinnamon arrives warm and spicy, Peru balsam adding a sticky, resinous sweetness that lingers for a few hours. It's the middle section where Cigar Black Oud earns its name, the woody notes and amber start to suggest smoke, not literal smoke, but the warmth of something burning slow and close. The drydown is where this fragrance lives longest. Vanilla and tonka bean settle into the skin, joined by benzoin's sticky sweetness and a soft musk that stays intimate rather than projecting. Eight to ten hours on most skin. The next morning, there's a faint trace on fabric, not the full composition, just the vanilla and warmth, like the ghost of the evening.
Cultural impact
Cigar Black Oud occupies a specific space in the budget-friendly oriental category, sweet, animalic, and resinous, with longevity that outlasts many fragrances at double the price. The opening can be polarizing, but the drydown consistently draws comparison to richer, more expensive compositions. It's the kind of fragrance wearers return to when they want warmth without complexity.



































